Albert’s broom scraped against the cracked concrete path, sweeping away candy wrappers and fallen leaves. The autumn breeze carried whispers of yesterday’s forgotten laughter. At 62, every bend made his back ache, and every step reminded him of decades of keeping this city park spotless.
“Morning, Albert!” Mrs. Henderson called as she jogged by, her golden retriever pulling at the leash. “Morning, Mrs.
H,” Albert replied with a smile. “Beautiful day, isn’t it?”
His work jacket was worn thin, and his paycheck was never enough. But Albert considered himself rich.
Not with money, but with something far more precious—his daughter, Linda. The memory of his wife walking out 26 years ago sometimes stabbed like a knife. Linda had been only six, standing by the kitchen window as her mother dragged two suitcases down the street, never looking back.
“Where’s Mommy going, Daddy?” Linda had asked, her little face pressed against the glass. Albert knelt, swallowing the lump in his throat. “I don’t know, sweetheart.
But it’s you and me now. We’ll be okay. I promise.”
And they had been okay.
He worked double shifts, patched her clothes, learned to braid her hair. He clapped the loudest at her school plays, sat proudly at every parent-teacher conference. Linda had grown into a kind-hearted woman, the kind who stopped to help strangers and volunteered at orphanages.
But she carried sadness. The doctors had told her years ago she couldn’t have children. Albert’s heart ached whenever she said, “Dad, what kind of life can I offer someone if I can’t give them a family?”
“You are family,” Albert told her.
“Blood doesn’t make a family. Love does.”
Still, Linda doubted herself. Albert wished he could give her the joy of motherhood.
He saw it in her whenever she read stories to the kids at St. Mary’s Children’s Home, her eyes glowing with warmth. Three months ago, a man named Roy had appeared at the orphanage.
He was about Linda’s age, with kind eyes and gentle hands. “I grew up here,” Roy told Albert one afternoon. “My parents left me at a gas station when I was five.
This place saved me.”
Albert noticed the way Roy looked at Linda, the way Linda’s laughter sounded lighter around him. Maybe, Albert thought, God wasn’t finished writing their story yet. That October evening, as Albert finished sweeping near the old fountain, something caught his eye.
A small figure hunched on the bench. As he stepped closer, he saw a little girl—tangled blonde hair, a dirt-stained pink dress, clutching a backpack like her life depended on it. “Hello there, sweetheart,” Albert said gently, setting down his trash bag.
“Are you waiting for someone?”
The girl looked up with wide blue eyes. “Yes, sir. I’m waiting for my mommy.”
Albert’s stomach twisted.
“Where did she go?”
“She had to do something important. She told me to wait here and be a good girl.”
He glanced at his watch—it was nearly 7 p.m. The child had been sitting there for hours.
“What’s your name?”
“Kelly.”
“That’s a beautiful name. I’m Albert. Are you hungry?
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